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Tag Archives: Harvestman

Harvestman: Nemastoma bimaculatum

08 Saturday Nov 2025

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

British harvestmen, Harvestman, harvestman under bark, Nemastoma bimaculatum

It’s sad when huge old trees fall or need to be felled – I’m not sure what happened to the tree I found at Cardiff’s Heath Park one day last week – but it does provide opportunities for fossicking around logs and branches and under slabs of bark. And on this particular day, when I turned over one of several pieces of bark, I was delighted to find this harvestman, Nemastoma bimaculatum, a species I’d never seen before.

I’m reliably informed, by someone on social media who’s seen many of these harvestmen, that ‘they tend to freeze when you first turn over a log and expose them but then make a sudden run for it’, so I was exceedingly lucky that this one stayed perfectly still the whole time I had its home turned upside down. I was able to focus-stack some images but these harvestmen are tiny, just 2-3mm long, and the light was dull so my photos are not very sharp.

Fortunately for me, Nemastoma bimaculatum has distinctive markings – those two white spots on the black body, so it was easy to identify. This harvestman is not often recorded but the species is probably quite common – it’s just that most people don’t go looking under logs and bark to find them.

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Harvestman: Opilio canestrinii

07 Saturday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

Harvestman, Opilio canestrinii

I seem to be seeing a lot of Harvestmen this year. I’m not sure if they’re having a particular good year or if it’s just because I’m doing a lot of leaf-turning and that’s where they’re generally to be found, lurking on a leaf. With its orange coxae (think hip bones in humans – so at the top of the legs where they join the body) and a white ring around the eyes (not easy to see in this image, unfortunately), I think I’ve nailed the ID for this one: Opilio canestrinii.

231007 Harvestman Opilio canestrinii

Interestingly, the NatureSpot website reports that this harvestman is

an invader that is quickly colonising Britain. It was first seen in the UK in October 1999 beside a reservoir in the Lea Valley, Essex. The species has been expanding northwards from Italy, Austria and Switzerland. Where it has colonised Denmark and Germany, it has displaced the other two species of Opilio so this may also happen here.

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Under the log

29 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in fungi, insects, molluscs, nature, slugs, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#7DaysofWildChristmas, brain fungi, Catinella olivacea, Cogan Wood, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, earthworms, Harvestman, orange slime, slugs, snails, turning over logs, woodlice

The weather was back to grey and drizzly again today so I donned my wet weather gear and headed to Cogan Wood to spend part of day 5 of my #7DaysofWildChristmas challenge turning over a few rotten logs and branches. And what did I find lurking there?

Woodlice; snails both long and rotund; earthworms; luscious balls of orange slime; tiny globular balls that looked like the eggs of something or other; pale little lumps of White or Crystal brain fungi; slugs brown and black; a stripey legged Harvestman; miniscule white mushrooms adorned with drops of water; a young centipede or millipede – I can never be quite sure which is which; dark little cup fungi, black with olive rims (Catinella olivacea) – very pleased with that find; and various other things, the photographs of which were either out of focus or too grainy due to the poor light conditions in the woodland. There’s nothing quite like getting wild and muddy – it was fun!

181229 under the log (11)

181229 under the log (1)
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181229 under the log (3)
181229 under the log (4)

181229 under the log (5)
181229 under the log (6)

181229 under the log (7)
181229 under the log (8)

181229 under the log (9)
181229 under the log (10)

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Two Harvestmen

17 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, spiders

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

British insects, British invertebrates, Harvestman, Harvestmen, Opiliones species

I found these two mini-beasties lurking on the outside of my building the other day. They may look like spiders but they’re not really – they’re Harvestmen (Opiliones species). Unlike true spiders, Harvestmen can’t spin webs and their bodies have only one segment, not two. They’re completely harmless – no venom – and, I think, rather prehistoric looking.

181217 harvestmen (1)

And I just discovered this very interesting but slightly creepy snippet of information about them on the UK Safari website:

When attacked, harvestmen are able to shed a leg as a defensive trick. Even after the leg becomes detached from the body it continues to jump and flick about. This distracts the predator while the harvestman makes its escape. They are able to shed up to four legs in this way, but they need to retain at least one of the sensory legs to survive.

181217 harvestmen (2)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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